NPR : News

Filed Under:

New Week, Same Argument: Romney, Obama & Who's Being Dishonest

Play associated audio

President Obama and his campaign are being "dishonest" when they attack his record as a business executive, Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney said this morning on Fox & Friends as a new week on the presidential campaign trail began where the last one left off.

We're basically where we were on Friday, when Romney said he "had no role whatsoever in the management of Bain Capital after February of 1999" and the Obama camp was arguing that public records indicate he did.

For his part, the president says there's no reason for him to say he's sorry about ads that are blasting Romney over the Bain connection. "No, we will not apologize," he told Virginia's WAVY-TV.

As FactCheck.org says, whether Romney was or wasn't still involved in the running of Bain from 1999 into 2002 "has become a key point of contention, because Obama TV ads accuse Romney of shipping U.S. jobs overseas."

That nonpartisan fact checking group has also reported that "none of the SEC filings [cited by the Obama campaign as proof of Romney's post-1999 involvement in Bain's operations] show that Romney was anything but a passive, absentee owner during that time, as both Romney and Bain have long said. It should not surprise anyone that Romney retained certain titles while he was working out the final disposition of his ownership, for example."

Another nonpartisan watchdog, PolitiFact.com, has written that:

"Romney and his campaign have noted repeatedly that Romney left management of the company in 1999. That may be, but Romney was the company's founder, providing vision and direction for Bain. It's not as if his influence ended the moment he left to run the Olympics."

Still, says PolitiFact, "calling the companies 'pioneers in outsourcing' overstates the case. They did promote outsourcing, but they were part of a trend already decades in the making."

On Morning Edition today, NPR's David Folkenflik broke down the brouhaha, the fact-checking and how the Romney campaign has handled the story.

Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

NPR

Book News: Stephen King's New Bogeyman? Digital Publishing

Also: the legacy of Kierkegaard; the creator of Lyle Crocodile has died; Aussie airliner Qantas commissions flight-length books.
NPR

Washington State Butcher Spikes Pig Feed With Weed

Despite its name, the "pot pig" experiment isn't an attempt to develop a new meaty treat for stoners. Instead, a Seattle butcher is feeding marijuana seeds, stems and root bulbs to swine as a cheeky money-saving measure.
NPR

Fox News Reporter James Rosen Caught Up In Federal Probe

There is word of another controversial leak investigation by the Department of Justice. The target is Fox News reporter James Rosen, who was monitored by the department after breaking a story about North Korea's nuclear weapons program in 2009.
NPR

Tumblr Users Urge New Owner Yahoo To Keep The Site Weird

When news of Yahoo's purchase of Tumblr first hit, Tumblr users took their reactions online. The posts were quirky and sharp with plenty of worry about the future.

Leave a Comment

Help keep the conversation civil. Please refer to our Terms of Use and Code of Conduct before posting your comments.